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grunewar Wed Oct 21, 2009 03:21pm

Basketball is my favorite to officiate,

Pro Football and College March Madness are my favorites to watch on TV,

Hockey is my favorite to see live (Baseball is the cheapest to see live (but can be slow at times)), and

Golf is my favorite to still participate in.

I like em all!!!

tjones1 Wed Oct 21, 2009 03:21pm

I enjoy watching baseball, basketball, football, and hockey. If I had to pick my favorite sport to watch it would probably be baseball.

I officiate baseball, basketball, and football. I guess I'm a seasonal official as whatever sport I'm in seems to be my "favorite".

Raymond Wed Oct 21, 2009 03:47pm

Spectating: The NFL

Participating: pick-up basketball

Lcubed48 Thu Oct 22, 2009 02:50am

My top three!!
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Indianaref (Post 632076)
Is basketball your favorite sport?

I only officiate basketball.
My favorite sport to play is baseball followed by football then basketball. I rate them according to the level of my success while playing the sports. But, I do enjoy all three.

Mark Padgett Thu Oct 22, 2009 11:19am

If I really had to pick my favorite to watch, it would be the NHL back in the day when I had season tickets for the Blackhawks for two years. This was when they had Bobby Hull, Stan Mikita, Glenn Hall, Dennis Hull, Pit Martin, Phil Esposito, Ken Hodge, Pat Stapleton, Gilles Marrotte, etc.

Man, that was an exciting time. Watching Bobby Hull play against Gordy Howe was almost a fan's fantasy.

IowaMike Thu Oct 22, 2009 12:12pm

Baseball is my favorite sport and it is what I played all through high school. I love basketball too, particularly high school and college. I don't watch the NBA anymore. Love football too, I'm basically a sports nut. I officiate basketball and baseball, but basketball is by far my favorite to officiate. I like the constant movement and the ability to use judgment and determine advantage/disadvantage. It can be easy to zone out working baseball, especially in the field. An hour and a half basketball game seems to fly by, but those high school doubleheaders in baseball can take four or five hours and seem like twice that sometimes.

grunewar Thu Oct 22, 2009 12:57pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark Padgett (Post 632317)
If I really had to pick my favorite to watch, it would be the NHL back in the day when I had season tickets for the Blackhawks for two years. This was when they had Bobby Hull, Stan Mikita, Glenn Hall, Dennis Hull, Pit Martin, Phil Esposito, Ken Hodge, Pat Stapleton, Gilles Marrotte, etc.

Man, that was an exciting time. Watching Bobby Hull play against Gordy Howe was almost a fan's fantasy.

As I stated earlier, I love hockey live and up close too!

While it might not be Hull vs Howe, or even Gretzky vs Lemieux (yet), here in DC we have "The Great 8" Alex Ovechkin vs Sid "The Kid" Crosby - which ain't bad!

PS - besides, in DC, it's all we've got! :(

Mark Padgett Thu Oct 22, 2009 01:56pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by grunewar (Post 632336)
PS - besides, in DC, it's all we've got! :(

What about all those games being played in Congress? Plus, if I remember correctly, there was some kind of sport being played in Bill Clinton's closet with my cousin Monica.

shavano Thu Oct 22, 2009 02:21pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark Padgett (Post 632177)
Soccer? Fahgeddaboudit, unless one of the grandkids is playing.

Actually, soccer officiating requires better conditioning that just about any of the other sports & probably even more snap decision making. ( illegal contact, offside, etc. with 22 players on the field)

Most soccer officials run an average of 4.7 miles on the pitch during a game. The halves are also 45 minutes with no time outs.

Reffing soccer keeps me in shape for doing basketball. Or, is it the other way around??

Fahgeddaboudit?? Only if you can't hack it.... :D

Indianaref Thu Oct 22, 2009 03:19pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark Padgett (Post 632134)
Shooting a BB gun is your second favorite sport!?!?!

BB is short for Bad Boy:)

Camron Rust Thu Oct 22, 2009 04:01pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by shavano (Post 632342)
Actually, soccer officiating requires better conditioning that just about any of the other sports

Quite possibly.
Quote:

Originally Posted by shavano (Post 632342)
& probably even more snap decision making. ( illegal contact, offside, etc. with 22 players on the field)

Not sure I agree with that. The proximity of basketball makes for a lot more situtations. With soccer, there are at least 7 of those 22 who are not even remotely involved in the play at any given time (1 goalie and, commonly, 4 defenders, and 2 forwards form the other team). Of the remaining 15, only a couple are really at risk of being offsides, and through much of the game many of them are not really near the ball nor near another player. Stuff may happen away from the ball, it is not really that common. Most soccer action happens in the vicinity of the ball.
Quote:

Originally Posted by shavano (Post 632342)
Most soccer officials run an average of 4.7 miles on the pitch during a game. The halves are also 45 minutes with no time outs.

.... :D

Not the one my team had two weeks ago. :eek: The guy barely moved. His OOB calls seemed to be determined by a coin flip as he got them wrong about as often as he got them right. Both the opposing coach and I would look at each other and scratch our heads wondering what he was looking at. What it boiled down to was that he stayed pretty much near the center circle and was rarely in the right spot to even have a decent look at the play.

shavano Thu Oct 22, 2009 05:00pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Camron Rust (Post 632349)

Not sure I agree with that. The proximity of basketball makes for a lot more situtations. With soccer, there are at least 7 of those 22 who are not even remotely involved in the play at any given time (1 goalie and, commonly, 4 defenders, and 2 forwards form the other team). Of the remaining 15, only a couple are really at risk of being offsides, and through much of the game many of them are not really near the ball nor near another player. Stuff may happen away from the ball, it is not really that common. Most soccer action happens in the vicinity of the ball.

I agree with you to an extent about the involvement pf players at any given time. You'd be surprised ( or maybe not) at the amount of crap that goes on "off ball". Unfortunately, it doesn't get called near as much as it should, because all of the official's attention is in the vicinity of the ball. Then, when the person initiallly wronged tries to retaliate, they generally get caught and carded for Unsporting , or worse, Violent Conduct.


Quote:

Originally Posted by Camron Rust (Post 632349)
Not the one my team had two weeks ago. :eek: The guy barely moved. His OOB calls seemed to be determined by a coin flip as he got them wrong about as often as he got them right. Both the opposing coach and I would look at each other and scratch our heads wondering what he was looking at. What it boiled down to was that he stayed pretty much near the center circle and was rarely in the right spot to even have a decent look at the play.

I've seen a few of those, believe me. That's one of the things I appeciate about the double-dual ( 3 whistle) system used in most states for high school soccer. You may get stuck with a "center-dweller", but as long as your side refs are running, the offside line and most of the fouls still get covered.

BillyMac Thu Oct 22, 2009 06:49pm

Hockey In Phoenix, Give Me A Break ...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark Padgett (Post 632317)
If I really had to pick my favorite to watch, it would be the NHL back in the day when I had season tickets for the Blackhawks for two years. This was when they had Bobby Hull, Stan Mikita, Glenn Hall, Dennis Hull, Pit Martin, Phil Esposito, Ken Hodge, Pat Stapleton, Gilles Marrotte, etc. Man, that was an exciting time. Watching Bobby Hull play against Gordy Howe was almost a fan's fantasy.

You're right. That was before southern expansion ruined the NHL. Gordie Howe played here in Connecticut, on a team called the Whalers. Now the Whalers are called the Hurricanes and play in North Carolina, a real hockey hotbed, not.


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